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Crayola Colors — Hex Codes

All 97 Crayola crayon colors with hex codes and RGB values. Browse by color family, search by name, and click any swatch to copy the hex code instantly.

Showing 97 of 97 colors

About Crayola Crayon Colors

Crayola has been making crayons since 1903, when the original box contained just 8 colors. Today the standard 64-count box and expanded 120-count box cover virtually every hue a designer, artist, or child could need. Each color has a specific name — from classics like Burnt Sienna and Cerulean to playful names like Razzle Dazzle Rose and Screamin Green.

The hex codes on this page are widely used digital approximations of each crayon color. Because physical pigments cannot be perfectly reproduced on screen, these values are calibrated matches rather than official Crayola specifications. They are accurate enough for design work, digital art, branding presentations, and educational projects.

Commonly searched Crayola colors: Cerulean (#1DACD6) was voted the color of the millennium in 2000. Burnt Sienna (#EA7E5D) is consistently rated the most nostalgic crayon color by adults. Dandelion (#FDDB6D) was retired in 2017 and replaced by Bluetiful. Periwinkle (#C5D0E6) remains one of the most searched crayon hex codes.

Crayola Color History

  • 1903: Original 8-color box (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, brown, black)
  • 1949: Expanded to 48 colors
  • 1958: 64-count box introduced — the iconic gold and green tin
  • 1993: 96-count box released
  • 1998: 120-count box with built-in sharpener
  • 2017: Dandelion retired; Bluetiful added as 24th blue crayon
  • 2024: Current lineup includes over 120 named colors